With the 'Punjab Transparency & Accountability in delivery of Public Services (including electronic service delivery), Ordinance 2017' getting the government nod, the Punjab Right to Service (RTS) Act, 2011, ceases to exist.
The Right to Service Act did not
provide provision for mandatory online/digital system to receive requests for various services and delivery thereof in a time-bound manner.
The ordinance had been drafted after discussions with various stakeholders to understand and ascertain the issues involved in the implementation and compliance of the RTS Act, 2011, according to an official spokesperson.
Among the key features of the Ordinance are: back-end computerization of all public services within three to five years, online receipt of service requests to become mandatory, electronic delivery of services to citizens in a time-bound manner to enhance transparency and accountability.
Other areas of focus relate to inclusion of a healthy system of incentives and disincentives for the public authority and its staff, intimation or tracking of application status by the applicants through mobiles or internet regarding their request, and simplifying redressal/appeal mechanism with faster delivery of justice.
The term of the scheme expired on October 31, 2017.
Under the scheme, around 300 private and 200 government hospitals have been empanelled to provide health benefits to the 29 lakh odd families.
The state government was also working on a plan to cover the entire population of Punjab under Universal Health Insurance Scheme, said the spokesperson, adding the health department was in the process of preparing the design and structure of the scheme.
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